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    Wednesday, May 1, 2019

    Health implants should have open source code. Pacemaker or insulin-releasing implant can be lifesaving, but they are also vulnerable not just to malicious attacks, but also to faulty code. Computer Science

    Health implants should have open source code. Pacemaker or insulin-releasing implant can be lifesaving, but they are also vulnerable not just to malicious attacks, but also to faulty code. Computer Science


    Health implants should have open source code. Pacemaker or insulin-releasing implant can be lifesaving, but they are also vulnerable not just to malicious attacks, but also to faulty code.

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:05 AM PDT

    A new computation model that can drastically impact chip manufacturing (QCM and trinary)

    Posted: 01 May 2019 03:00 AM PDT

    On Claude Shannon’s 103rd Birthday, Here Are 103 Memorable Shannon Quotes, Quips, and Maxims

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 11:28 AM PDT

    Levenshtein distance: max character difference or ratio given a minimum similarity.

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 02:45 PM PDT

    Hi all,

    Thanks in advance for viewing this post. Was wondering the following:

    Given two strings, are we able to determine whether a similarity level is possible based on the number of characters in each string? As in, is there a max difference in number of characters or max/min ratio in number of characters in order to achieve a specified similarity threshold? For instance...

    Say we have str_1 and str_2 with min_similarity_score = 0.80 (score ranges from 0-1 based on these docs)

    Is it possible to use only the lengths of str_1and str_2 to determine whether that score is achievable, regardless of the strings themselves?

    It is obvious if that if str_1 = "hi" and str_2 = "hello there how are you?" that the score could not be achieved, due to an absolute difference in characters of 22 and ratios of 0.083 and 12 respectively - however, is there a mathematical way to determine this?

    submitted by /u/ownallogist
    [link] [comments]

    What areas of programming and computer science are "off limits" for someone who is not good in math?

    Posted: 01 May 2019 01:47 AM PDT

    I am learning to be a programmer and would like to know what areas I simply cannot tackle without math (I know some algebra but thats it). For example I am interested in learning algorithms.

    submitted by /u/BigBootyBear
    [link] [comments]

    OpenCV Launching Kickstarter Campaign for New AI Courses

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 01:39 PM PDT

    Robotic Catheter Autonomously Navigates in a Beating Heart

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 12:45 PM PDT

    Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach is the #1 Best Book for Learning AI

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 09:04 PM PDT

    new Art of the Problem series on AI coming soon

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:06 PM PDT

    AI Pioneer Li Deng Named Canadian Academy of Engineering Fellow

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 12:45 PM PDT

    The stochastic thermodynamics of computation

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 05:44 AM PDT

    OpenStack wants Airship 1.0 to take flight and move devs up to the cloud without tears

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:10 AM PDT

    ETSI and the Linux Foundation agree to bring open source and standards closer

    Posted: 30 Apr 2019 06:07 AM PDT

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